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The Courage to Be

โœ Scribed by Paul Tillich


Publisher
Yale University Press
Year
1952
Tongue
English
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


This book has more good ideas in it than clam chowder has calories. It's packed into every page, every line. Tillich is concerned with how the question of finding the courage to face up to existential doubts about death, meaninglessness, and guilt are tied to the ontological questions of being versus nonbeing. How can we affirm our existence when it seems so temporary, meaningless and full of moral failure? Tillich explores with incredible freshness and insight age old strategies, from Spinoza to the Stoics (his discussion of the Stoics alone is worth the price of the book). He gives a brilliant account of how people find the courage to overcome existential anxiety through particpation in groups and through individual strategies like existentialism. Finally, he explores the theological implications in a way that may challenge anyone who has stereotyped Tillich as a mouthpiece for Christianity. The book is excellently written, never dumbed down but always graspable. He also litters the book with brilliant asides on subjects like the history of existential angst and its relations to social relations and a great exploration of existential art. Don't pass this one up.

โœฆ Table of Contents


  1. Being and Courage
    Courage and Fortitude: From Plato to Thomas Aquinas
    Courage and Wisdom: The Stoics
    Courage and Self-affirmation: Spinoza
    Courage and Life: Nietzsche
  2. Being, Nonbeing, and Anxiety
    An Ontology of Anxiety
    The meaning of nonbeing
    The interdependence of fear and anxiety
    Types of Anxiety
    The three types of anxiety and the nature of man
    The anxiety of fate and death
    The anxiety of emptiness and meaninglessness
    The anxiety of guilt and condemnation
    The meaning of despair
    Periods of Anxiety
  3. Pathological Anxiety, Vitality, and Courage
    The Nature of Pathological Anxiety
    Anxiety, Religion, and Medicine
    Vitality and Courage
  4. Courage and Participation (The Courage to Be as a Part)
    Being, Individualization, and Participation
    Collectivist and Semicollectivist Manifestations of the Courage to Be as a Part
    Neocollectivist Manifestations of the Courage to Be as a Part
    The Courage to Be as a Part in Democratic Conformism
  5. Courage and Individualization (The Courage to Be as Oneself)
    The Rise of Modern Individualism and the Courage to Be as Oneself
    The Romantic and Naturalistic Forms of the Courage to Be as Oneself
    Existentialist Forms of the Courage to Be as Oneself
    The existential attitude and Existentialism
    The existentialist point of view
    The loss of the existentialist point of view
    Existentialism as revolt
    Existentialism Today and the Courage of Despair
    Courage and despair
    The courage of despair in contemporary art and literature
    The courage of despair in contemporary philosophy
    The courage of despair in the noncreative
    Existentialist attitude
    The limits of the courage to be as oneself
  6. Courage and Transcendence (The Courage to Accept Acceptance)
    The Power of Being as Source of the Courage to Be
    The mystical experience and the courage to be
    The divine-human encounter and the courage to be
    Guilt and the courage to accept acceptance
    Fate and the courage to accept acceptance
    Absolute faith and the courage to be
    The Courage to Be as the Key to Being-itself
    Nonbeing opening up being
    Theism transcended
    The God above God and the courage to be

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<div> <p>This book has more good ideas in it than clam chowder has calories. It's packed into every page, every line. Tillich is concerned with how the question of finding the courage to face up to existential doubts about death, meaninglessness, and guilt are tied to the ontological questions of b